Report, August 2002, P

Report, August 2002, P

Chapter 3 A brief history of Australia's naval shipbuilding industry 3.1 This chapter gives a brief history of naval shipbuilding for the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). It provides a summary of RAN builds and naval shipbuilding and repair facilities in Australia prior to World War 2. The chapter then looks at the vessels built for the RAN during the 1960s, 1970s and early 1980s and notes the difficulties experienced with both in-country and offshore builds. The early years of naval vessel construction and repair in Australia 3.2 The docking and repair of naval vessels at Australian dockyards pre-dates federation. In the 1850s, the Williamstown dockyard on the southern shore of Port Phillip Bay was established as a base for the Victorian Navy—the first navy established on the Australian continent.1 Australia's first dry dock was opened in 1855 at Mort's Dock in Balmain. In 1856, the New South Wales government reserved Garden Island in Sydney Harbour as a base for the Royal Navy and a ship repair site.2 In 1857, Fitzroy Dock was constructed at Cockatoo Island at Potts Point to service visiting vessels of the Royal Navy.3 3.3 The Cockatoo Island dockyard assembled the first Australian-built warship for the RAN—HMAS Warrego—in June 1912, a year after the official establishment of the RAN.4 The same year, the Commonwealth government purchased the dockyard from the New South Wales government. It remained in Commonwealth ownership until 1933, when it was leased to the Cockatoo Docks and Engineering Co. Pty Ltd. Appendix 7 shows that the Commonwealth had an active record of naval vessel construction at Cockatoo Island between 1912 and 1933, highlighted by the commissioning of three River class torpedo boat destroyers in 1916. After 1933, the Cockatoo Docks and Engineering Company maintained a high rate of naval vessel construction with the building of two Sloop vessels (frigates) in the mid-1930s and 1 Charles Murton, 'Historic Williamstown', Williamstown Historical Society Museum, http://www.labyrinth.net.au/~crmurton/historicwtown.html (accessed 19 May 2006). 2 History of Garden Island, see http://www.gardenisland.info/1-02-000.html (accessed 11 May 2006). 3 R. G. Parker, Cockatoo Island: A History, Thomas Nelson (Australia), Melbourne, 1977, p. 10. National Archives of Australia, The History of Cockatoo Island dockyard, http://www.naa.gov.au/Publications/research_guides/guides/dockyard/chapter01.htm (accessed 11 May 2006). 4 National Archives of Australia, The History of Cockatoo Island Dockyard, http://www.naa.gov.au/Publications/Research_Guides/guides/dockyard/pages/chapter01.htm (accessed 5 May 2006). HMAS Warrego had been built in Scotland and dismantled for reassembly at Cockatoo Island. Page 40 A brief history of Australia's naval shipbuilding industry several Bathurst class minesweepers, Tribal class destroyers and River class frigates during the war years (see Appendix 7). 3.4 Since 1857, Garden Island has been the base of the Royal Navy's Australia Station and by the turn of the 20th century was well-established as a naval dockyard. In 1912, the Garden Island dockyard was transferred to the control of the Commonwealth Naval Board and the following year, the Admiralty handed over the island's buildings to the Commonwealth government.5 The dockyard was used extensively during World War 1 for the repair of naval vessels and during the early 1920s for the refit of the British-built 'J class' submarine. In the 1940s, a naval graving dock was built on the island to enable fast refit and repair of naval vessels in Australia. Previously, many vessels needed to travel to Singapore for repair. With the fall of Singapore in 1942 and ongoing construction work at Cockatoo Island, a dry dock at Garden Island became a strategic imperative.6 When the Captain Cook Graving Dock opened in 1945, at a cost higher than the outlay on the Sydney Harbour Bridge, Garden Island was established as the most important ship repair facility in Australia. 3.5 At Williamstown, work began on a state shipyard in 1865 and a dry dock was completed in 1873.7 The shipbuilding dockyard was officially opened in April 1913 following the construction of two building berths. In 1918, the Commonwealth purchased the dockyard from the Victorian government and subsequently announced a six ship construction program at Williamstown.8 Thereafter, the Williamstown dockyard averaged 'a vessel per year in addition to a large programme of refitting'.9 From 1913 to 1945, however, Williamstown was only active in constructing naval vessels during World War 2, when it built eight Bathurst class minesweepers and the survey vessel Warreen. In 1940–41, two building slips were completed and in 1942, the Navy took over the dockyard from the Melbourne Harbour Trust.10 5 History of Garden Island, http://www.gardenisland.info/1-02-000.html (accessed 11 May 2006). 6 Captain Cook Graving Dock, http://www.gardenisland.info/1-02-010.html (accessed 11 May 2006). 7 Parliamentary Standing Committee on Public Works, Construction of Facilities for the Australian frigate project, Williamstown dockyard, Melbourne—Phase B, Parliamentary Paper No. 189/1985, 1985, p. 3. The dock was called the Alfred Graving Dock. 8 Historic Williamstown, http://www.labyrinth.net.au/~crmurton/historicwtown.html (accessed 11 May 2006). See A. Bunnett, G. Halliburton and P. Webb, 'The Southern base of the RAN: A short history of HMA Naval Dockyard, Williamstown', Naval Historical Review, http://www.navyhistory.org.au/review/71-1.pdf (accessed 11 May 2006). 9 A. Bunnett, G. Halliburton and P. Webb, 'The Southern base of the RAN: A short history of HMA Naval Dockyard, Williamstown', Naval Historical Review, http://www.navyhistory.org.au/review/71-1.pdf (accessed 11 May 2006). 10 Parliamentary Standing Committee on Public Works, Construction of Facilities for the Australian frigate project, Williamstown dockyard, Melbourne—Phase B, Parliamentary Paper No. 189/1985, 1985, p. 3. A brief history of Australia's naval shipbuilding industry Page 41 3.6 In the inter-war years, Australia's naval shipbuilding companies were not large enough to compete with the yards in Glasgow and Belfast and relied on substantive foreign orders. The 1930s were particularly lean for the Williamstown dockyard, which produced only three vessels.11 Even in the 1920s, however, when the RAN ordered production of 22 steel ships from Australian shipbuilding companies, 'most had to close, or confine themselves to repairs'.12 3.7 Unsurprisingly, the RAN's demands during World War II were a fillip for Australia's naval shipbuilding and repair industry. The majority of naval vessels built at the Cockatoo Island and Williamstown dockyards were completed during the early to mid-1940s. In total, 113 RAN naval vessels were built at ten Australian dockyards during the Second World War, in addition to the repair of over 4000 RAN ships, over 500 United States Navy ships and 391 Royal Navy Ships.13 Shipbuilding challenges—the experience of the 1960s, 1970s & early 1980s 3.8 The repair of naval vessels at Australian dockyards continued in the immediate post-war years, albeit at a lesser rate. The RAN continued to purchase naval vessels from the UK and by 1964 had ordered the three Perth-class guided missile destroyers from the U.S. Dr Paul Earnshaw has noted that 'from about 1960…Australia had become a more discriminating customer, obtaining its naval requirements from the most appropriate source'.14 3.9 However, Australia’s increasing resort over the 1960s and 1970s to purchasing foreign naval vessels for the RAN reflected the poor performance of domestic naval shipbuilding projects. The construction of the Daring and River class destroyers at the government-owned Williamstown and Cockatoo dockyards in the 1950s and 1960s ran well over cost and schedule.15 3.10 The difficulties plaguing local construction and the preference for foreign acquisition continued in the 1970s, leaving Australian dockyards to focus primarily on repair work. Apart from the two oceanographic vessels, HMAS Cook (1973) and HMAS Flinders (1981), the Williamstown dockyard did not commission a naval 11 'History of hard work and strife', Herald Sun, 15 June 2006, p. 66. 12 Australian Heritage Commission, Linking a nation, 2003, http://www.ahc.gov.au/publications/national-stories/transport/chapter2.html (accessed 11 May 2006). 13 J. H. Straczek, Sea Power Centre Australia, General RAN history, RAN in the Second World War, http://www.navy.gov.au/spc/history/general/ww2.html (accessed 20 May 2006). 14 Dr Paul Earnshaw, 'Australian Naval Shipbuilding—1960s to the present', Journal of the Australian Naval Institute, January–March 1998, p. 22. 15 Dr Mark Thomson, Setting a course for Australia's naval shipbuilding and repair industry, Australian Strategic Policy Institute, Policy Report, August 2002, p. 16. He wrote that: 'the Daring class ships were delivered years late, and cost twice as much as the same class of ships built in Britain. The River Class suffered three-fold cost escalation during the project. Page 42 A brief history of Australia's naval shipbuilding industry vessel between 1971 and 1991. After the commissioning of HMAS Torrens in 1971, the Cockatoo Island dockyard did not commission another vessel until the underway replenishment ship HMAS Success in 1986. 3.11 The Department of Defence experienced problems with both local construction and foreign acquisition projects. The following section identifies problems associated with the three major warship decisions of the 1970s—the locally

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